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Did you or do you have an awesome father?

Gracie - Proud Conservative 2012/06/17 02:50:07
My father was an amazing man. He was a Merchant Marine before he was 18, he lied about his age. He was a hobo, a coal miner, a gold miner, a rancher, and later in life he owned a factory. He sailed around the Cape, broke his ankle in Mozambique when he fell off a rail car running from the police, got locked in a refrigerated car, and found God from an old man in California. His mother died when he was 13 and his siblings were spread all over. He took an old pickup truck in the 30's, drove it from New York to California and back to get his baby sister. She was forever grateful.

I was born when he was 53 and we traveled all over the country during my childhood. He bought a big Victorian house that I grew up in because he thought it was cool. He took us in abandoned mines, visited every Presidential birthplace in America, taught us hobo songs and never passed up a diner for coffee.

In the 60's he retired and we moved to Florida. He immediately revolted against the Jim Crow laws of the south and set out to correct them. He brought black people to our church and started a black church. He had coffee with the town leaders in the morning and they burned a cross in our yard at night. He laughed at them and they never stopped him.

He's the one that gave me love of history, Patriotism and God. He taught me to stand up for what was right even if I was standing alone. He never met a debate he didn't love and he read the entire Book of Mormon to be better informed to argue with his brother since he was a devout Seventh Day Adventist.

He died in 1995 at the age of 93 and he never complained a day in his life. I wish my spirit was as free as his. Happy Father's Day, daddy! I love and miss you!!
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  • Gunner 2012/06/17 03:08:20
    Gunner
    +4
    Thanks for your heart-felt post Gracie, and Happy Fathers Day to your Dad as well.

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  • Apache 2012/06/19 09:30:52 (edited)
    Apache
    +2
    Dad was my rock, he always will be. He has so many characteristics of your dad Gracie.

    I miss you dad.
  • Gracie ... Apache 2012/06/20 00:37:34
  • Fariborz-Zak 2012/06/18 05:53:16
  • mach 2012/06/17 16:26:33
    mach
    +1
    Very nice tribute to your dad Gracie, he sounds like someone MANY can be proud of!
  • John "By God" American 2012/06/17 12:20:30
    John "By God" American
    +3
    Thank you for sharing that!
  • Cognito22 2012/06/17 10:38:10
    Cognito22
    +1
    Thanks for sharing that with us.
    Being a dad is often a job that you don't understand until after the kids have grown up and you have time to reflect.
    For the younger dads, show 'em you love 'em often.
  • Pug For Huck 2012/06/17 05:54:42
    Pug For Huck
    +3
    Great Post!!

    I had a great Dad. He taught me quiet resolve and a hard-line work ethic. I miss him greatly.
  • Ishmael 2012/06/17 04:34:33
    Ishmael
    +1
    I can relate Gracie. Both my Dad AND Grandad were merchant seamen. My Grandad went to sea in 1900 on the last of the square-riggers and had his Sailor's Union of the Pacific card signed by Andrew Ferusuth, founder of the union and author of the 1915 Seaman's Act that set wage, hour and safety standards and outlawed Flogging of the crew. MY dad went to sea in 1939 and was 500 miles ENE of the big Island of Hawaii on 12/7/41 as an able seaman aboard the SS President McKinley. He heard the distress calls from the SS Cynthia Olsen, 300 miloes nnw of him when she was sunk by the IJN sub I-26.



    When he pulled into Pearl on 12/9, he found that, as a merchant seaman, he had a job skill critical to the war effort and a draft deferment for the entire war. Since that job was raking the troops TO the invasion beache and dropping them off, He saw action taking supplies to Dutch Harbor for the Attu & Kiska invasions, then took part in the invasions of North Africa, Sicily, Salerno and Anzio in Italy. Then he hopped a ship, the SS John Drake Sloat in New York and took the scenic route to San Francisco via Iwo Jima in the Bonin islands duirng that invasion there. Along the way, he was shot at by representatives of FOUR Axis Powers, the Japanese, Germans, Italians and Vichy French. The onl...



    I can relate Gracie. Both my Dad AND Grandad were merchant seamen. My Grandad went to sea in 1900 on the last of the square-riggers and had his Sailor's Union of the Pacific card signed by Andrew Ferusuth, founder of the union and author of the 1915 Seaman's Act that set wage, hour and safety standards and outlawed Flogging of the crew. MY dad went to sea in 1939 and was 500 miles ENE of the big Island of Hawaii on 12/7/41 as an able seaman aboard the SS President McKinley. He heard the distress calls from the SS Cynthia Olsen, 300 miloes nnw of him when she was sunk by the IJN sub I-26.

    cynthia olsen

    When he pulled into Pearl on 12/9, he found that, as a merchant seaman, he had a job skill critical to the war effort and a draft deferment for the entire war. Since that job was raking the troops TO the invasion beache and dropping them off, He saw action taking supplies to Dutch Harbor for the Attu & Kiska invasions, then took part in the invasions of North Africa, Sicily, Salerno and Anzio in Italy. Then he hopped a ship, the SS John Drake Sloat in New York and took the scenic route to San Francisco via Iwo Jima in the Bonin islands duirng that invasion there. Along the way, he was shot at by representatives of FOUR Axis Powers, the Japanese, Germans, Italians and Vichy French. The only time HE ever used a firearm in the entire war was in the commission of two armed liquor store robberies in SF that got him nine months in San Quentin.

    I actually was able to confirm much of his stories through Ancestry.com. They have Ships' Crews lists for New York and the whole West coast of every merchant ship that sailed out or arrived at those ports. If you're interested, I've written a series of short stories about his exploits under the working title, "Tales of The Inadvertent Pacifist" here:

    http://www.myspace.com/loners...
    (more)
  • Gracie ... Ishmael 2012/06/17 19:51:17
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    As you probably already know, a larger percentage of Merchant Marines were killed than any other branch of the service during WWII. It was a dangerous job. I'm a little confused as to my father's time in the MM because I found him on a census at the Great Lakes Naval Academy when he was still 17. Perhaps they did training there or perhaps they found out he wasn't 18 and kicked him out? I do know he was never in the Navy so it's still a mystery to me. I use ancestry all the time and I'll be interested to find my father on the 1940 census when it's all indexed. My uncle, his brother-in-law, gave me more of a timeline than his older children were able to. Apparently they're not in agreement with my uncle's version but they're not known for the truth, so who knows. I'd love to read your stories, that's the part of genealogy that I love, the interesting stories!

    I, like so many others, didn't ask the right questions until it was too late.
  • apachehellfire65 2012/06/17 04:32:47
    apachehellfire65
    +1
    no! in truth my dad was a worthless POS!
  • Gracie ... apacheh... 2012/06/17 20:00:45
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    And you're breaking that trend, right?
  • apacheh... Gracie ... 2012/06/17 21:24:00
    apachehellfire65
    +1
    bigtime!
  • Rodney 2012/06/17 04:27:12
    Rodney
    +3
    Thank You Gracie for such a loving tribute to you father. While mine may not have had such a colorful life, his box of crayons were still filled with color. From 8th grade drop out, to graduating high school at 45 (there abouts) and eventually getting an Associates degree in Agriculture. He worked 2 jobs his whole life to see that we never went without. We weren't rich, but never really poor. He gave us all great adventures. From losing the brakes on the '59 Plymouth wagon going down Lombard St. In San Francisco (that was in 1960) to the Seattle Worlds Fair in '62 where this independent little 8 year old decided he could see what he wanted without the family. hehe We traveled all over, always had 2 weeks at a mountain lake resort town in a cabin. He bought his first farm when he was but 20 ( paid 25 cents and acre) and cleared it eventually making it one of the valleys best producing farms. Bought his second shortly after getting married and cussed to his last breath because he had to pay 50 cents and acre. Haha. The hardest thing I have experienced was to watch helplessly as this tall man (not just in physical height) end up tethered to an oxygen generator. Unable to walk more then 50 feet without getting winded. His heart finally gave up on him. I miss him so much, but am who I am because of his greatness. Had I ever become a father, I would have been just like him.
  • Gracie ... Rodney 2012/06/17 20:06:52
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    +1
    Perhaps we see the world through the eyes of our fathers? I always wonder how my views of the world were shaped, by his actions or just inheriting his genes? The last time I spoke with his sister, the one he rescued, she told me that I sounded just like my father. As I visited her in a nursing home when she had very little mental capacity she told me what a wonderful man her brother, Jesse, was. I don't even think she knew I was his daughter. I like to think I'm like him but in reality I know I lack his courage for the unknown. I guess that's the part I got from my mother...too bad!

    It is hard to watch them go and it's hard to know that you'll never speak with them on this earth again! You'd have made a wonderful father, Rodney.
  • Rodney Gracie ... 2012/06/17 21:09:16
    Rodney
    +1
    Thank You Gracie. I like to think I would have made a great dad. Growing up (after my voice changed at least, I was mistaken for my dad all the time. Been told how I even walk like him. Hope that was before all his medical issues and not after. He is one of the few people I have ever known who can bend over to pick up a dime and come up with a dollar instead. For no more education then he had, he taught himself investing and how the markets worked. Mother will never have to worry because of what he managed to do.

    Have a wonderful Fathers day Dear!
  • seadog6608PWCM 2012/06/17 04:22:20
  • Gracie ... seadog6... 2012/06/17 20:07:50
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    +1
    I bet he has some stories!! Write them all down, don't wait until it's too late!
  • seadog6... Gracie ... 2012/06/18 01:20:16
  • Rusty Bubbles 2012/06/17 03:47:45 (edited)
    Rusty Bubbles
    +2
    My dad (and mom) raised10 kids and he sat in a beat up Volkswagen bug pulling peanut-butter and jelly sandwiches from a paper sack in the parking lot for lunch ....while his peers hopped in their luxury cars and went on to their 2 hour "Power Lunches".....to put us all through private school all our lives ................and college
  • Gracie ... Rusty B... 2012/06/17 20:08:48
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    +1
    It's good that good people have many children. We should populate the country with them!
  • Rusty B... Gracie ... 2012/06/17 23:40:33 (edited)
    Rusty Bubbles
    +1
    Unfortunately the living standard of today cannot support large families anymore, it now takes two income(or more) to enjoy what one used to accomplish


    One of my dads friends told him that if he didn't have so many kids he could afford the finer things in life. He looked him dead in the eye and replied :"Bob, I'm rich in ways you could never understand"

    It was at my fathers funeral that "Bob" told me that story and that he did finally come to understand.
  • Old Salt 2012/06/17 03:29:12
    Old Salt
    +3
    My Dad was the very BEST! I was a medical doctor in WWII and served in Bastongne during the Battle of the Bulge! He received injuries himself when he parachuted in to the town being struck several times by German fire.... yet would not allow his injuries to be tended till he operated on more seriously injured soldiers coming in from the front lines. He even saved the life of a German soldier who I had the privilege of meeting some 30 years later!
  • Gracie ... Old Salt 2012/06/17 03:33:09
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    +2
    Wow, I guess that explains why you're such a great guy! My uncle was in the Battle of the Bulge, in the Army. I didn't know that until recently.
  • Old Salt Gracie ... 2012/06/17 03:38:01
    Old Salt
    +2
    The German man who's life he saved, I went to go visit him in 1973 while I was stationed in the Medditeranian! That man treated me as if I were a king! Told me that IF it had not been for my dad, he would have died! That was some meeting! :)
  • Gracie ... Old Salt 2012/06/17 20:09:33
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    That's an amazing story! It's so awesome that you actually got to meet him like that.
  • Old Salt Old Salt 2012/06/17 03:34:19
    Old Salt
    +2
    I wanted to add a pic of a memorial case I had made up from his burial flag as well as a commemorative of his participation in the Battle of the Bulge! Old Salt

    lpopo
  • seadog6... Old Salt 2012/06/17 04:23:50
  • Gracie ... Old Salt 2012/06/17 20:10:03
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    +1
    That's so cool, I love it!
  • Old Salt Gracie ... 2012/06/19 22:32:22
    Old Salt
    +1
    Thanks Gracie! :)
  • enlightened one 2012/06/17 03:24:43
    enlightened one
    +2
    I also had an awesome dad. He served the U.S. Navy for 20 years. He flew for the U.S. Naval Air Force. He was a pilot who fought in the WW2 in the Pacific. He was someone to be proud of and rely on for me and my sisters. He passed on July 4, 1982. He was the one person who sat bedside when I was severely injured in a car accident in 1971. He helped feed me when I was unable to eat. He was the one who told me about the death of my husband because of that car accident. For all my memory and all of my young life, my father was the epitome of what a father should be to his children. He worked hard, paid taxes, and encouraged all of us girls to be independent and self-sufficient. He was what I would expect in a man who becomes a father. Although I have seen some come close, no one has shown me that they could be that self-sacrificing or loyal to his fatherhood as my dear dad.
  • Gracie ... enlight... 2012/06/17 03:31:24
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    +2
    Wow, that brought some tears to my eyes! I'm so sorry about the loss of your husband. What would America be like today if all children had a great father and mother? Great parents are necessary for great children, I feel sorry for those who don't have what we've had. God Bless all the great father's on Father's Day! They don't have to be with us if they're in our hearts.
  • enlight... Gracie ... 2012/06/17 03:40:21
    enlightened one
    +2
    Thank you, Gracie :)
  • Gunner 2012/06/17 03:08:20
    Gunner
    +4
    Thanks for your heart-felt post Gracie, and Happy Fathers Day to your Dad as well.
  • Dan (Politicaly Incorrect) 2012/06/17 03:03:40
    Dan (Politicaly Incorrect)
    +3
    My Dad wasn't like that. But he did the best he could.
  • HarleyCharley 2012/06/17 02:54:16
    HarleyCharley
    +3
    yes...
  • Gracie ... HarleyC... 2012/06/17 02:56:41
    Gracie - Proud Conservative
    +2
    You aren't going to tell me about him?

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